Abstrakt: |
Moving or changing the location of households located at mining site sites (surface excavations) is a very complex and complex problem that is often expressed in practice through various types of conflict situations. Although most of the subject matter is regulated by legal regulations of which the obligations of the entity for which the household relocates to the transferring entity, objectively there are risks of non-execution or, at least, of all obligations for all the said parties. Certainly as a consequence of this, there are damages for all sides of different sizes and volumes. Here is a very important sociological aspect of the problem of relocation that almost generates very high, more specific risk thresholds, especially for the households that are moving, that is, the members of those households. In practice, there are cases where one and the same household is transferred several times to different locations (three times), which may be how the research shows very stressful and painful for members of these households, especially the youngest and oldest population. How to minimize conflict situations in such newly emerging circumstances, stressful situations, potential damage to all stakeholders, and reduce overall risk potentials is a very complex problem that does not seem to be the case in the first reviews, but which is evident and needs to be further explored. The paper presents the parts of the conducted research of the author of the work with the available data as well as the attempts of a broad perspective view and analysis of the problem concerned when mining is concerned with modern approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |